Harrahs Entertainment on Friday joined other gaming companies and posted decreases in quarterly revenues and cash flow as the economic slowdown hurt the companys operations throughout the country.

However, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Gary Loveman said several construction projects around the country will put the company in a good position once the economy begins to recover.

Harrahs posted a net loss of $187.8 million for its first quarter ended March 31, compared with a net income of $185.3 million last year, according to a Friday filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Total revenues declined 2.1 percent to $2.6 billion from $2.66 billion in 2007 while property cash flow, defined as earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, fell 6.9 percent to $650.5 million from $698.4 million.

The company had posted increases in both categories last quarter and for 2007.

"The first quarter was an odd assemblage of months of very different qualities," Loveman said during a Friday conference call.

January was "benign," February was "encouraging" and March was "lousy" for the company, he said.

However, $211.3 million in costs related to an early debt retirement, and another $142.6 million related to the companys buyout also contributed to the loss.

In Las Vegas, revenues dropped 4 percent to $863 million from $898.6 million while cash flow fell 7.5 percent to $275.3 million from $297.6 million.

Those properties generated 33.2 percent of the companys revenues and 42.3 percent of its cash flow.

Harrahs owns and operates 51 properties in 10 states and internationally. Company casino revenues dropped 3.3 percent to $2 billion from $2.2 billion for the quarter.

Harrahs current growth pipeline in Las Vegas and around the country appears unaffected by the economy although projects other companies have planned have suffered setbacks.

A $1 billion expansion of Caesars Palace is still planned for a partial opening next year with completion in 2010.

In March, Harrahs Atlantic City opened the first 12 floors of a new 960-room hotel tower, part of a $565 million expansion that will continue through midyear.

Work also continues toward a fall completion of a $485 million expansion of the Horseshoe in Hammond, Ind. and the $704 million Margaritaville Casino & Resort in Biloxi, Miss., which is scheduled to open in 2010.

However, there was no mention of a $500 million arena slated for land behind Ballys and Paris Las Vegas.

Harrahs spokeswoman Jacqueline Peterson referred all questions about the arena to Los Angeles-based Anschutz Entertainment Group, which is funding and will manage the 20,000-seat facility.

The plans for the arena still need approval of Clark County officials.

International plans for Harrahs have suffered a series of setbacks in the past two months.

The company withdrew from a proposed $2.6 billion resort project in the Bahamas and shelved talks with Slovenia-based Hit Group about developing a $1.2 billion resort in the Eastern European country.

Another possible international setback, although Loveman downplayed the news Friday, was an announcement by Chinese officials in late April that new casino licenses in Macau will not be approved.

Harrahs has been shut out of the gaming enclave.

In September, Harrahs paid $577.7 million for the rights to a land concession contract for the 175-acre Macau Orient Golf Course. Some gaming observers believed then that Harrahs could transform the golf course into a hotel-casino site.

"Use of our land position in Macau is something we understood would take some period of time," Loveman said Friday.

Private equity firms Apollo Management and TPG Capital acquired the gaming company in a $30.7 billion buyout, including debt. The equity investors received $5 million in service fees for the quarter.

Harrahs Entertainment is no longer publicly traded but still must file quarterly earnings reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission to guide bondholders.

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